New York Codes, Rules and Regulations
Title 18 - DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES
Chapter II - Regulations of the Department of Social Services
Subchapter B - Public Assistance
Article 2 - Determination of Eligibility-Categorical
Part 361 - Case Management Activities For Pregnant And Parenting Adolescents
Section 361.9 - Comprehensive needs assessments; identifying goals, tasks and providers; personal plans
Current through Register Vol. 46, No. 39, September 25, 2024
(a) Timing. Within 90 calendar days from the date an eligible adolescent is referred to case management staff for case management activities, the case manager must provide the adolescent with the information and assistance necessary to ensure that the adolescent understands which services and assistance providers exist to help the adolescent to maintain and strengthen family life and to attain or retain the capability for maximum self-support and personal independence so the adolescent may make an informed choice regarding the services and assistance providers to which he or she would like to be referred. The case manager also must complete a comprehensive assessment of the adolescent's needs; identify the short- and long-range goals the adolescent needs to achieve and the tasks the adolescent needs to complete in order to maintain and strengthen family life and to attain or retain the capability for maximum self-support and personal independence, and the estimated time periods for achieving those goals and completing those tasks; identify and inform the adolescent about the services and assistance providers available to help the adolescent attain those goals and complete those tasks; and develop a personal plan for the adolescent to gain access to the services and assistance providers to which the adolescent chooses to be referred.
(b) Comprehensive needs assessment.
(c) Identifying goals, tasks and providers. Based on the adolescent's assessed needs, the case manager, in consultation with the adolescent and any other appropriate individual, must identify: the adolescent's short- and long-range goals within each of the primary assessment areas, the specific tasks which the adolescent and other appropriate individuals need to complete for the adolescent to attain those goals, and the estimated time periods necessary to attain those goals and complete those tasks. The case manager also must identify the service and assistance providers available to help the adolescent attain those goals and complete those tasks and provide the adolescent with information about those providers so the adolescent can make an informed choice regarding the providers to which the adolescent wants to be referred.
(d) Personal plan. The case manager, in consultation with the adolescent and any other appropriate individual, must develop a personal plan for the adolescent describing: the goals toward which the adolescent chooses to work, the tasks necessary to accomplish those goals, the service and assistance providers to which the adolescent chooses to be referred to receive help in attaining those goals, and the estimated time periods necessary to attain those goals. The personal plan does not have to include all the goals the adolescent needs to achieve in order to maintain and strengthen family life and to attain or retain the capability for maximum self-support and personal independence; however, the plan must include those goals toward which the adolescent chooses to work during the next six-month period and the services and assistance providers to which the adolescent chooses to be referred to receive help in attaining those goals. The personal plan should be written in such a manner that the adolescent will be able to understand the plan's provisions. The personal plan must include a statement explaining that the plan is flexible and that it can and will be revised if necessary. The adolescent must be given a copy of the personal plan, and a copy must be retained in the adolescent's individual case record.
(e) Failure to comply with the plan. The case manager may not deem the adolescent's failure to complete any portion of his or her personal plan as a request by the adolescent to have the case closed.